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More than people think especially doing wfp work.That is why some happy to earn a low hourly rate could end up actually losing money if not careful.
Quote from: Smurf on March 21, 2016, 05:12:17 pmMore than people think especially doing wfp work.That is why some happy to earn a low hourly rate could end up actually losing money if not careful.Silly comment there smurf. It would take a very low hourly rate to actually'lose' money. £30 an hour is a very reasonable rate to be aiming for. Even if you minus £10 an hour of that, which realistically you shouldn't have that much expenditure, then £20 an hour is still a good wage.7 hours a day =£140 × 5 = £700 a week, obviously less after tax/insurance but that's still comparable to a £33-34000 salary a year for a 48 week year.If you speak to the average Joe they would be shocked window cleaners are earning £30,000+ a year after expenses.
Quote from: chris turner on March 21, 2016, 05:42:31 pmQuote from: Smurf on March 21, 2016, 05:12:17 pmMore than people think especially doing wfp work.That is why some happy to earn a low hourly rate could end up actually losing money if not careful.Silly comment there smurf. It would take a very low hourly rate to actually'lose' money. £30 an hour is a very reasonable rate to be aiming for. Even if you minus £10 an hour of that, which realistically you shouldn't have that much expenditure, then £20 an hour is still a good wage.7 hours a day =£140 × 5 = £700 a week, obviously less after tax/insurance but that's still comparable to a £33-34000 salary a year for a 48 week year.If you speak to the average Joe they would be shocked window cleaners are earning £30,000+ a year after expenses.Silly comment yourself. 48 x £700 = £33,600. What about running costs? Sick pay? Pension? I doubt you'd have £25,000 left after those are deducted if you're WFP.
Quote from: 8weekly on March 21, 2016, 06:05:33 pmQuote from: chris turner on March 21, 2016, 05:42:31 pmQuote from: Smurf on March 21, 2016, 05:12:17 pmMore than people think especially doing wfp work.That is why some happy to earn a low hourly rate could end up actually losing money if not careful.Silly comment there smurf. It would take a very low hourly rate to actually'lose' money. £30 an hour is a very reasonable rate to be aiming for. Even if you minus £10 an hour of that, which realistically you shouldn't have that much expenditure, then £20 an hour is still a good wage.7 hours a day =£140 × 5 = £700 a week, obviously less after tax/insurance but that's still comparable to a £33-34000 salary a year for a 48 week year.If you speak to the average Joe they would be shocked window cleaners are earning £30,000+ a year after expenses.Silly comment yourself. 48 x £700 = £33,600. What about running costs? Sick pay? Pension? I doubt you'd have £25,000 left after those are deducted if you're WFP.Read again That was AFTER deducting £10 pH for running costs.
Quote from: 8weekly on March 21, 2016, 06:05:33 pmQuote from: chris turner on March 21, 2016, 05:42:31 pmQuote from: Smurf on March 21, 2016, 05:12:17 pmMore than people think especially doing wfp work.That is why some happy to earn a low hourly rate could end up actually losing money if not careful.Silly comment there smurf. It would take a very low hourly rate to actually'lose' money. £30 an hour is a very reasonable rate to be aiming for. Even if you minus £10 an hour of that, which realistically you shouldn't have that much expenditure, then £20 an hour is still a good wage.7 hours a day =£140 × 5 = £700 a week, obviously less after tax/insurance but that's still comparable to a £33-34000 salary a year for a 48 week year.If you speak to the average Joe they would be shocked window cleaners are earning £30,000+ a year after expenses.Silly comment yourself. 48 x £700 = £33,600. What about running costs? Sick pay? Pension? I doubt you'd have £25,000 left after those are deducted if you're WFP.Don't know about you but iv only had about 4 maybe 5 sick days in 5 years. I rarely get ill and when I do I normally just get on with it.What's a pension?
Before you get out of your van and do a clean Has anyone worked out how much it has cost to get you outside the property ....,I mean that pro rata the van ,insurance ,mot ,tax ,road tax equipment, uniform ,liability insurance odds and ends and so on and on. I know we all have different kit androunds but expenditure before we actually start a clean must be similar?Each job must have a set cost to you even before you even start cleaningAny ideas
Quote from: tonyoliver on March 21, 2016, 05:06:34 pmBefore you get out of your van and do a clean Has anyone worked out how much it has cost to get you outside the property ....,I mean that pro rata the van ,insurance ,mot ,tax ,road tax equipment, uniform ,liability insurance odds and ends and so on and on. I know we all have different kit androunds but expenditure before we actually start a clean must be similar?Each job must have a set cost to you even before you even start cleaningAny ideasDivide your expenses last year by the number of jobs you did last year. Simple.Vin
Year one £15kYear two £5kInto year nine and its coming in at around £3500 a year without deducting the capital value of my equipment and van.So from day one your talking around £28/29k.I honestly could have done it a lot cheaper as there must be at least £2k of that wasted on rubbish gear that was hardly usedand I bought a ready built system.The thing is it doesn't mean squat as there will be guys paying £3k a year on insurance alone and other things like meteredwater and high fuel costs that don't effect me.